At the Upcoming Winter Olympics in PyeongChang, Honoring Bobsledder Steven Holcomb’s Legacy on and Off the Ice

Beverly Hills, CA, February 13, 2018 –(PR.com)– Olympic bobsledder Steven Holcomb, who passed away last May, will be honored at this year’s Winter Olympic Games for his advocacy work on behalf of patients suffering Keratoconus, the degenerative eye disease that almost derailed his racing career.

Holcomb was in training for the Vancouver Winter Olympics when he was diagnosed with the disease. Eager to compete, he’d tried to hide his failing vision, racing by feel (here’s how the track looked to Steven) until his eyesight deteriorated to the point where he could no longer compete.

Twelve doctors told him the only treatment option was a corneal transplant, which has a long recovery time and meant he’d have to sit out the Olympics. Then, Holcomb’s team doctor discovered a non-invasive procedure called C3-R, which strengthens the cornea with a special application of vitamins and light (read more about the procedure here).

After undergoing the procedure and additional lens implants, Holcomb made a full recovery; his vision was restored to 20/20. He was declared fit to race, and steered the U.S. bobsled team to an Olympic gold in Vancouver—America’s first gold medal win in four-man bobsled since 1948.

Subsequently the procedure was named Holcomb C3-R in his honor, making the first time a medical procedure was named after an Olympic athlete.

In the years that followed, Holcomb became an outspoken advocate for minimally invasive Keratoconus treatments, appearing on TV to share his experience and embolden Keratoconus sufferers to take action.

He also collaborated with his eye surgeon, Dr. Brian Boxer Wachler, on a foundation called Giving Vision—to award grants to needy Keratoconus patients for travel expenses and, in several cases, the entire cost of the sight-saving procedure. Since its formation, Giving Vision has saved the eyesight of over one hundred patients.

Many patients sent thanks to Holcomb via recorded, post-procedure interviews. “Those interviews meant a lot to Steven,” Dr. Brian Boxer Wachler recalls. “Steven found his calling in bobsledding, but—as he himself said—he found his purpose in helping people.”